Associations to the word «Desolate»
Noun
- Desolation
- Loneliness
- Habitation
- Hearth
- Tempest
- Misery
- Woe
- Ruin
- Midst
- Land
- Despair
- Sorrow
- Plain
- Countryside
- Famine
- Harrier
- Expanse
- Plague
- Calamity
- Empty
- Bloodshed
- Wilderness
- Strife
- Solitude
- Wasting
- Vast
- Incursion
- Moor
- Remote
- Grandeur
- Silent
- Waste
- Wild
- Judah
- Desert
- Tundra
- Indifference
- Abode
- Landscape
- Oppression
- Scenery
- Extremity
- Prosperity
- Wandering
- Emptiness
- Groan
- Steppe
- Weep
Adjective
Wiktionary
DESOLATE, adjective. Deserted and devoid of inhabitants.
DESOLATE, adjective. Barren and lifeless.
DESOLATE, adjective. Made unfit for habitation or use; laid waste; neglected; destroyed.
DESOLATE, adjective. Dismal or dreary.
DESOLATE, adjective. Sad, forlorn and hopeless.
DESOLATE, verb. To deprive of inhabitants.
DESOLATE, verb. To devastate or lay waste somewhere.
DESOLATE, verb. To abandon or forsake something.
DESOLATE, verb. To make someone sad, forlorn and hopeless.
Dictionary definition
DESOLATE, verb. Leave someone who needs or counts on you; leave in the lurch; "The mother deserted her children".
DESOLATE, verb. Reduce in population; "The epidemic depopulated the countryside".
DESOLATE, verb. Cause extensive destruction or ruin utterly; "The enemy lay waste to the countryside after the invasion".
DESOLATE, adjective. Providing no shelter or sustenance; "bare rocky hills"; "barren lands"; "the bleak treeless regions of the high Andes"; "the desolate surface of the moon"; "a stark landscape".
DESOLATE, adjective. Crushed by grief; "depressed and desolate of soul"; "a low desolate wail".
Wise words
To use the same words is not a sufficient guarantee of
understanding; one must use the same words for the same
genus of inward experience; ultimately one must have one's
experiences in common.